Ezekiel 31:5-15

5 Because it was well-watered, It grew taller than other trees. Its branches grew thick and long.
6 Every kind of bird built nests in its branches; The wild animals bore their young in its shelter; The nations of the world rested in its shade.
7 How beautiful the tree was - So tall, with such long branches. Its roots reached down to the deep-flowing streams.
8 No cedar in God's garden could compare with it. 1 No fir tree ever had such branches, And no plane tree such limbs. No tree in God's own garden was so beautiful.
9 I made it beautiful, with spreading branches. It was the envy of every tree in Eden, the garden of God.
10 "Now then, I, the Sovereign Lord, will tell you what is going to happen to that tree that grew until it reached the clouds. As it grew taller it grew proud;
11 so I have rejected it and will let a foreign ruler have it. He will give that tree what it deserves for its wickedness.
12 Ruthless foreigners will cut it down and leave it. Its branches and broken limbs will fall on every mountain and valley in the country. All the nations that have been living in its shade will go away.
13 The birds will come and perch on the fallen tree, and the wild animals will walk over its branches.
14 And so from now on, no tree, no matter how well-watered it is, will grow that tall again or push its top through the clouds and reach such a height. All of them are doomed to die like mortals, doomed to join those who go down to the world of the dead."
15 This is what the Sovereign Lord says: "On the day when the tree goes to the world of the dead, I will make the underground waters cover it as a sign of mourning. I will hold back the rivers and not let the many streams flow out. Because the tree has died, I will bring darkness over the Lebanon Mountains and make all the trees of the forest wither.

Ezekiel 31:5-15 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO EZEKIEL 31

This chapter contains a confirmation of the preceding prophecy, of the ruin of the king of Egypt, by the example of the king of Assyria, to whom he was like in grandeur and pride, and would be in his fall. The time of the prophecy is observed, Eze 31:1, the prophet is ordered to give the following relation to the king of Egypt, Eze 31:2 in which the king of Assyria is compared to a large and flourishing cedar, for the extent of his dominions, the prosperous state of his empire, and his exaltation above all other princes, which drew upon him their envy Eze 31:3-9, wherefore because of his pride, his heart being lifted up with these things, Eze 31:10, ruin came upon him; which is described by the instruments and manner of it, and the effects following it; mourning and fear in some, solace and comfort to others, and destruction to his associates, Eze 31:11-17, wherefore Pharaoh is called upon to consider all this, who was like to him in greatness and pride, and should have the like fate with him; nor could his greatness any more secure him than it did the Assyrian monarch, Eze 31:18.

Cross References 1

  • 1. 31.8Genesis 2.9.

Footnotes 2

  • [a]. [One ancient translation] clouds; [Hebrew] thick branches.
  • [b]. [One ancient translation] clouds; [Hebrew] thick branches.
Scripture taken from the Good News Translation - Second Edition, Copyright 1992 by American Bible Society. Used by Permission.